. ILLAMOOK. OREGON. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 18. 1894. Vol. VII. No. 21 PROFESSIONAL CARDS THE BIG BAFT 1 he Astoi'ian of October 12, says: | j JAVII) WILEY. M I)., ¡"Yesterday at noon the monster rail, which for the past six weeks AND ACCOIKTIEPR, has been in course of construction All calls profit; tly attended t > at Stella, arrived safely in Port in office at the A1.OEE .IAN. TILLAMOOK, ORE tow ol tlm lug Monarch ami (lie steamer City of Frankfort. The HAVPON, M. I). Monarch dropped anchor at a point opposite the O. R. and N. dock, Special a!tenti»»n to Surgery and and held on to the raft with a t’hroni - Piscases. hawser, both swinging with the BAY CITY, ORE. tide and nearly blocking lip the channel, for the time being, so long \y I MAY, is the peculiar looking craft. Hun­ dreds of people Hocked to the water­ ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, front and watched the progress of TILLAMOOK, OREGON. the steamers with the big tow from the moment they came in sight of J T. MAULSBY, | the river above Tongue Point, until !anchor was dropped abreast the ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ! city, after which many people Notai y Public anti Real Estate ConveyHiicer. | visited the raft during the after- TILLAMOOK. OREGON. . noon. PIIYSLT IN, SI IKilON (JLAFDE THAYER, A'l TORNEY- Vl’-I.A W, T illamook , O regon W. SEVERANCE. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Tll.l. XMOoK. OKKGON. MISCELLANEOUS. i. K. r > blacksmith Wngvll insklux, Rial Hll kinds of Wood work Mill «nd General UlRckRinlUmig done. Mncliinery Repaired. Wagons Made to Order. £4^-llor«e shoeing a Sjxvialty- TIM.ANOOK. OHL. CHAg. PETERSON. BARBER SHOP- First Class in Every Particular. Shaving, Mair Cutting. Shampooing BATH ROOMS IN CONNECTION. The patronage of the public is reiqieet- uljy solicited. Frescoing, Decorating. painting , and Paper-hanging. For estimates and prices call on. or write to H ermann G rshxfr . Beaver Post-office. 4i Tillamook County. Orc. Looking at it from a distance it , resembles very mach the whale- ¡back class of vessels, and appears to be very solidly constructed. In dimensions the raft is 100 feet shorter, but seven feet wider beam ’ and seven feet deeper than the raft that was constructed last year ' n( Goos Bay, and contains at least one third more limber. It is 525 feet in length, 52 feet beam, taper- ing to two feet at the ends, 27 feet deep, and draws 20 feet aft and 19 feCt, 6 inches forward. It contains 9000 piles, averaging forty feet in lei iigtli, in running feet a total of ! 360,000. A part of the raft is com J posed of 8000 running feet of ship's I spars, which, with the piling, j makes a total of 4,500,000 lineal I feet. The raft is formed around a | 1 I Works, uml they left out about 8 o’clock in the evening. This raft is consigned to the Southern Pacific railroad at San Francisco, and it is expected that ten days will be con­ sumed in towing it down. Another raft will lie framed at Stella this w inter and taken out in I lie spring. When work was started on the cradle at Alderbrook It was in­ tended to load 300.000 feet of Inno her on the raft at the Clatsop Mills, but on account of the lateness of (he season the idea Wils abandoned. Mr. A. K. Robertson left for San Francisco on the Monarch, ami Mr. \V. E. Baines returned to Stella last night to supervise the eon struction of the second raft. L atek :—The tali got safely out and has been sighted on her journey down the coast. FOR SETTLEMENT. Township 3 north, range 6 west, was throw n open for filing Monday. A number of filings were made by settlers with the register of the land office at Oregon City on that day, about a dozen going from this place. Among the number were Win. Watrous, Dr. G. <». Rogers, A. F. Shearer, Mr. Witt and Geo. ami E. J. and John Straight. This is a line timber region ami also et>ntsii uh much good agricultural land and is situated at the extreme head of the Nehalem river. The township was first entered by Jas. Stephenson and Geo. K. Burnett, wll(l lna(]e a private survey of a part of it and opened up the old military wagon road about four years ago.—Forest Grove 1 imes. $1.50 Per Year. lax list, and t he combination never dreamed that the county court would take a hand and let the work to the lowest bidder. The H eaui . ight does not like to cut rates, but it is willing to be out a little for the fun of bursting a con­ spiracy. The bidding was a great surprise to the Advocate, and after Mr. Handley read it in the H ead ­ light he squirmed around trying to convince the authorities that Iiis bid was the lowest. Fifty cents per column is very cheap, even it it were so. but the Advocate has several columns that it does not get one cent per column for. and and the balance are not worth one cent to its readers. It doesn’t, even give the court proceedings. As to starving concerns,—well, the Advocate was just dying ami was offered repeatedly nt 8500. Finally Mr. Handley got it I’or873 in county orders, and two or three other parties whose names dare not be published took a little stock on the European plan. The thing will be to sell or give away again soon. The H eadlight has llm business in this country and is content with it. See which starves out first! It touched I lie Advocate in a sore spot when the tax list was let main chain 540 feet long, to which are attached cross chains which go p» the H eadlight . In fact, tl.e crosswise through the raft at inter- Advocate expected to get 40 cents vals of 12 feet on the main body of per line for doing the work—enough the structure, ami at the tapering to pay for its 8350 outfit. Forty ends, herring-bone chains are used cents a line is a little over 25 times and are laid at right-angles to the the rate that it will be done for. main chain. Attached to the lat­ but when the Advocate realized ter are the chains which encircle that the H eadlight hud knocked the raft, and when being towed, their combination out of sight, it the tighter the strain on the main bid only two cents a line, just a chain, the more compact arc the shade over the H eadlight . In fact as every printer knows both piling held together. There was no trouble experi­ bids scraped the bottom, ami were enced in coming down the river, only nominal figures. It was noth except an accident near Woody ing but a contest between two island, w here they spent the night, papers, ami the H eadlight got the raft drifting against the tug s there. No use to cry because our rudder and damaging it slightly. bid was one.half cent lower. Every, As soon as they arrived in the body umlerstamlsthat theAdvocate city yesterday the broken parts was kept going only with the un­ were repaired by t e Astoria Iron' derstanding that it would get the The Observer acknowledges a call from Indian policeman Pave Leno, of Grand Ronde. Mr. Leno ami his party were on their way home from the State Fair, ami he does not report that they enjoyed tlieir slay there the best in the world. Leno is one of the largest farmers on the reservation. His farm of 3(10 acres is located at the junction of tlm salmon river and Neslucca roads. Mr. Leno was born in Oregon, near Chemawra, and was moved to (he Grand Ronde reservation 3(1 years ago. He says there are only thirteen pure-blood Indian families at Grand Ronde, and a total population of 3(10.— I »alius (»bserver. For the first lime in iiis literary career .Jerome K. Jerome is about towrite directly for an American audience. This work consists of a series of papers similar in vein to Ida “Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow,’’ but addressed to American girls and women. The articles will begin shortly in The Ladies’ Home Journal, which periodical will print the entire series. Tlif II kad LI giit is only »1.0.1 per year until further notice Hipan* Tabule* : a family r -m-